Media outlets are closely monitoring the collapse of the INF treaty, a landmark deal made by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev after a tumultuous Cold War. The treaty, Milne explains, “...bans ground-launched missiles with a range of 310 miles to 3,415 miles, and bans either country from stationing land-based missiles in Europe.” But a potential he-said-she-said incited President Trump to call out suspected Russian subterfuge, resulting in Russian President Vladimir Putin to similarly call off the agreement. Levitsky says it’s right for people to worry, noting that the end to the INF is “a blow to arms control and could lead to a new arms race.”

Levitsky, who spent years as a U.S. diplomat and ambassador, emphasizes that the goal of the INF was to “eliminate a whole class of nuclear weapons,” yet with its end comes a new era of uncertainty.

Read The Mirror’s story here and the original interview with Professor Levitsky here.

Melvyn Levitsky is a professor of international policy and practice at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and a retired career minister in the U.S. Foreign Service. He spent 35 years as a U.S. diplomat, including as ambassador to Brazil, executive secretary of the State Department, ambassador to Bulgaria, and deputy assistant secretary of state for human rights.

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